Live Currency Converter
Convert AUD to USD, EUR, GBP, JPY and 30+ currencies using live exchange rates updated daily from the European Central Bank. Free, instant, no sign-up required.
AUD Exchange Rates — Live Reference Table
The following rates show the current value of 1 Australian Dollar against major world currencies. Rates are sourced from the European Central Bank via the Frankfurter API and updated daily on business days.
| Currency | Code | 1 AUD = | 100 AUD = | 1,000 AUD = |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading live rates… | ||||
How to Use the Currency Converter
Step 1 — Enter your amount
Type any amount in the left field, or use the quick-select buttons (100, 500, 1,000, 5,000 etc.) for common amounts. The conversion updates instantly.
Step 2 — Select your currencies
Use the dropdown menus to select your “from” and “to” currencies. The converter supports 24 currencies including AUD, USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, SGD, CNY, NZD and more.
Step 3 — Swap currencies
Click the ⇄ swap button to reverse the conversion instantly — for example, switching from AUD → USD to USD → AUD without re-entering your amount.
Step 4 — Click any rate card for instant conversion
The rate cards at the bottom of the calculator show the conversion of your entered amount into 10 major currencies simultaneously. Click any card to set that currency as your “to” currency.
About the Exchange Rates
This converter uses live rates from the Frankfurter API, which sources its data from the European Central Bank (ECB). Rates are updated daily on European business days, typically at around 4pm CET. Rates are not available on weekends and ECB public holidays — the most recent available rate will be shown.
These are mid-market rates — the midpoint between buy and sell rates. The actual rate you receive from a bank, broker or exchange will include a spread or fee on top of this mid-market rate.
AUD Exchange Rate Guide for Australian Traders
What Moves the AUD/USD Rate?
The Australian Dollar is heavily influenced by commodity prices — particularly iron ore, coal and gold, which are Australia’s largest exports. When commodity prices rise, the AUD typically strengthens. Key factors that affect the AUD/USD rate include:
- RBA interest rate decisions: Higher rates attract foreign capital and strengthen AUD
- Iron ore and commodity prices: Australia’s resource exports are a major AUD driver
- Chinese economic data: China is Australia’s largest trading partner — Chinese GDP, PMI and manufacturing data all impact AUD
- US Federal Reserve decisions: Fed rate changes affect the USD side of AUD/USD
- Australian GDP, CPI and employment data: Domestic economic indicators move the AUD
- Global risk sentiment: AUD is considered a “risk currency” — falls during global uncertainty
AUD vs Major Currencies — Historical Context
The AUD/USD rate has ranged from approximately 0.57 to 0.83 over the past decade. The AUD reached parity with the USD in 2011 during the mining boom, and fell to decade lows near 0.57 during the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. As of April 2026, the AUD/USD trades around 0.63–0.65, reflecting the divergence between RBA and Fed monetary policy cycles.
Why Exchange Rates Matter for Forex Traders
For Australian forex traders, currency conversion has two key applications:
- Account funding: If your broker uses a USD base account, converting AUD to USD means the current exchange rate directly affects how much buying power you have
- P&L conversion: Profits and losses on USD-quoted pairs (like EUR/USD) need to be converted back to AUD at the prevailing rate when you withdraw
- FX fee awareness: Some brokers charge 0.5–0.7% on currency conversion — on large transfers, this adds up quickly
Choosing a broker that offers an AUD base account (like Pepperstone, IC Markets and FP Markets) eliminates the need for currency conversion entirely for Australian traders.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate are the exchange rates in this converter?
This converter uses mid-market rates published daily by the European Central Bank (ECB) via the Frankfurter API. These are the most widely used benchmark rates for currency conversion. However, they are mid-market rates — the rate you receive from a bank, currency exchange or broker will include a spread or fee that means you receive slightly less than the mid-market rate. For indicative purposes, these rates are accurate and reliable. For live forex trading rates, check your broker’s platform directly.
How often are the rates updated?
Exchange rates are updated once per day, Monday to Friday, sourced from the European Central Bank’s daily reference rate publication. Rates are typically available from around 4pm Central European Time (1am–2am AEST). Rates are not updated on weekends or ECB public holidays — the most recent available rate is shown on those days.
What is the current AUD to USD exchange rate?
The current AUD/USD exchange rate is shown live in the converter above. As of April 2026, the AUD/USD rate trades around 0.63–0.65. The rate changes continuously during forex market hours (24 hours a day, Monday to Friday). The rate shown in this converter is the daily ECB reference rate, updated each business day.
Why is the rate I get at my bank different from this converter?
Banks and currency exchange services make money by applying a markup (spread) on top of the mid-market rate. For example, if the mid-market AUD/USD rate is 0.6500, your bank might buy AUD from you at 0.6300 and sell USD at 0.6700 — the difference is their profit margin. The rate in this converter is the mid-market benchmark rate with no spread applied. For the best rates when converting currency, compare bank rates, specialist FX providers like OFX or Wise, and your broker’s FX conversion rate.
Which Australian forex brokers offer AUD base accounts?
Most major ASIC-regulated brokers offer AUD as a base account currency, including Pepperstone, IC Markets, FP Markets and IG Markets. An AUD base account means you deposit and withdraw in Australian dollars without any currency conversion — your P&L is also calculated in AUD, so you are not exposed to exchange rate fluctuations between your account and your bank account. This is particularly convenient for Australian traders who primarily trade AUD-quoted pairs.